A suite of solo exhibitions by Terry Allen, Hasan Elahi, McCallum & Tarry, and Kaari Upson. One on One compiles a diverse range of mediums, including video, painting, drawing, installation, and computer dialogue, to engender a unique exploration of the social, the psychological, and the personal through the individual.
SITE Santa Fe is pleased to present One on One, a suite of solo
exhibitions by Terry Allen, Hasan Elahi, McCallum & Tarry, and Kaari Upson. One on One compiles
a diverse range of mediums, including video, painting, drawing, installation, and computer dialogue, to
engender a unique exploration of the social, the psychological, and the personal through the individual.
The exhibition will be on view at SITE from February 6, 2010 – May 9, 2010. There will be a media
preview with the artists on Thursday, February 4, from 11 am-12 noon. The free public opening is Friday,
February 5, from 5 – 7 pm.
Each of the five artists in One on One profoundly examines the life of one person. The goal of each
examination is different, as are the means and the findings. But in each case, the artists use their subjects
as mirrors, not only for themselves, but also for the viewers. We are drawn into the intimacy of the
exchange and face different aspects of ourselves in the artists and their subjects. Organized by Laura
Steward, SITE Santa Fe's Phillips Director, and Janet Dees, Thaw Curatorial Fellow, One on One is a
psychologically charged exhibition that invites us into expanded portraits of many people.
Terry Allen
Artist, playwright, and musician Terry Allen examines an episode in the life of the similarly polymathic artist
Antonin Artaud. Throughout his life, Artaud suffered a number of psychological crises, resulting in his
repeated and lengthy institutionalization. In 1937, Artaud went to Ireland to return to the Irish people
what he believed was the staff of St. George. He was involved in an altercation with the Dublin police
and was subsequently deported. Because of his deteriorating psychological state, he was chained to a
cot in the hull of the ship Washington for the journey back to France. This journey serves as the inspiration
for Allen’s Ghost Ship Rodez, Allen’s presentation within One on One.
Taking its title from the French mental institution “Rodez,” where Artaud spent a number of years after his
deportation from Ireland, this exhibition will consist of room-sized multimedia works blending sculpture and
video. A portion of the exhibition will invoke the physical environment of the Washington. Another will include
a larger-than-life-size figure Momo lo Mismo, that refers to Artaud and the “Daughter of the Heart to be
Born,” an archetype representing all the women in Artaud’s life. Although these works allude to the physical
realities of Artaud’s life, their video components explore Artaud’s mindscape, giving form to psychological
space. In addition, Allen will present a large suite of works on paper entitled The Momo Chronicles,
loosely based on Artaud’s 1936 journey to Mexico to partake in the ceremonies of the Tarahumara
Indians. Allen invites us to take a journey into the depths of Artaud’s mind as he sees it — a place where
the boundaries of time and space are broken, where the past and future come together in the present.
In conjunction with his exhibition at SITE, Allen is planning a theater piece, Ghost Ship Rodez, scheduled
to be performed at The Lensic Performing Arts Center on April 9 & 10, 2010. Also forthcoming in the
spring of 2010 is a monograph on the artist, Terry Allen, to be published by University of Texas Press, with
a text by Dave Hickey, and essays by Marcia Tucker and Michael Ventura.
Hasan Elahi
The American artist Hasan Elahi, falsely accused by a misinformed neighbor of involvement in the 9/11
terrorists plots, has meticulously documented his life since then and presented his documents on the
internet for all to see. While Elahi is not investigating another individual, he is obsessively using technology
to track himself, as an exposé of modern life, particularly in a post-9/11 world of surveillance,
homeland security, and the Patriot Act.
SITE Santa Fe will feature Elahi’s ongoing project, Tracking Transience, a live feed that constantly
transmits his exact location and complementary photographic documentation. In one sense, Tracking
Transience is a self-tracking device that presents “an exaggerated version of the life we live in now.”
Through this infatuation with the self, Elahi exposes the political, technological, and social systems that
inform the modern experience.
McCallum & Tarry
In their passionate, poetic exchanges, documented in video and other means, McCallum & Tarry, an
interracial husband and wife team, seek to complicate and overcome the archetypical binary “white man/
black woman” in their work. By exploring their relationships to each other, McCallum & Tarry are in
fact investigating race in the cultural, historical, and sociopolitical contexts.
One on One will feature three works by McCallum & Tarry: Topsy Turvy, Cut, and Exchange. Topsy Turvy
is a video, sculpture, and historical collection that appropriates the “twinning” or “topsy turvy” dolls of
the 19th century. Using sculptural representations of themselves, McCallum & Tarry examine the duality
between white and black, male and female, father and mother. Cut is a video work in which McCallum &
Tarry cut each other’s hair. This work was influenced by photographs of Nazi collaborators in post-World
War II France whose hair was shorn as a form of punishment. With references to punishment (prisons),
possession (slavery), and retribution, Cut represents an act of collaboration, dominance and submission,
and control. By altering the physical identities of one another, the artists create a study of race, power,
and identity. Exchange draws inspiration from the “one drop rule” which declared that a person with
any African- American heritage was black. Through a ritual exchange of their blood and metaphorically
becoming one another, McCallum & Tarry navigate themes of race and social hierarchy. McCallum & Tarry
use their own identity as an interracial couple to explore the legacy and continuity of racism.
Kaari Upson
Kaari Upson keeps an extensive archive of a man named Larry. Initially based on the life of a real person,
Larry has become more fiction than fact, and Upson’s relentless investigation of the minutia of his life
offers extraordinary insight into the mind of the artist herself. Through an archival method, Upson has
given Larry a multifaceted life while simultaneously assimilating her life with his. In her own words, “The
objective reality of the man I construct collapses into the subjective fiction I create, until they merge and
I am more him than he is.” Kaari’s practice includes paintings, sculptures, photographs, and video
pieces. In her “kiss” paintings, she paints a portrait of Larry and a self-portrait, then smashes them both
together, resulting in a diptych that is an impastoed representation of “self” and “other”. Upson made a
dummy of Larry and in her video piece, As Long as it Takes – Part I: The Head, she meticulously removes
his head and places it over her own.
By confusing the boundaries between reality and fiction, self and other, Upson challenges the viewer
to question his/her perspective and identity. As Upson summarizes, “The challenge of defining the ‘me’ in
this project is a final manifestation of the loss of perspective [that] it presents.” One on One will feature
the most complete presentation of the Larry Project to date, including materials from the “archives,”
sculptures, drawings, paintings, and videos.
Image: Terry Allen Ghost Ship Rodez (in process), 2009.
Multi media, Courtesy of the artist and L.A. Louver Gallery
Photo: Joanne Carne
Press & Marketing
Anne Wrinkle | wrinkle@sitesantafe.org | 505-989-1199 ext. 22
Free Public Opening: Friday, February 5, 5-7 pm
SITE Santa Fe
1606 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
Hours: Thursday and Saturday, 10 AM–5 PM; Friday, 10 AM–7
Museum admission is $10 for adults and $5 for students, teachers, and seniors; members are free